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Is Pakistan allowed to do that ? Or is it allowed to do so, as a military operation(Sindoor) is still active ?
Doesn't matter. We will come ourselves for you piddly little maratha fanboys.But will China does that for Pakistan is the point. How sure you are??
I dont know if Pakistan needs to get permission for that. Modi has given ample reasons to keep that closed.Is Pakistan allowed to do that ? Or is it allowed to do so, as a military operation(Sindoor) is still active ?
Dont worry we pakistani know that a friend is friend not a family. We expected limited support. We are on our own.But will China does that for Pakistan is the point. How sure you are??
But will China does that for Pakistan is the point. How sure you are??
No major tributary of Ganges come from Tibet. 90% of Ganges generated from Gangotri.
Brahmaputra gets 74% of flow from rainfall and it's flows in an area that has too much excess water already
My last post on this topic.Had this before from you all proven wrong. Both the Ghaghara and Kosi, major Tributaries of the Ganges come from Tibet.
Yes blah blah rainfall argument again;
During 1998–2018, mean accumulated rainfall over the whole basin declined by as much as ∼60% during the October to December (OND) period. Similarly, a decline of ∼20% is observed for June to September (JJAS).
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Now stay on topic or face a ban from the thread.
You lot shouldn't be worried about water Modi and co have got this, your own words China cannot do anything. Let's see.....
My last post on this topic.
Here is an entire scientific report why it is not possible for China to block India's water supply in any meaningful way.
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Game theoretical analysis of China-India interactions in the Brahmaputra River Basin
This paper employs a game model to explain the water politics between China and India in the Brahmaputra River Basin (BRB) for the past two decades. W…www.sciencedirect.com
Agree with the last para of your post though.
In the same conference in concluding remark it was stated that dam will have minimum impact due to heavy rainfall in ArunachalI wrote a rebuttal to that and how China could do it with links. Anyway people can search for it, it's easy to find.
The seminar on "Ensuring Water Security, Ecological Integrity, and Disaster Resilience in the Sub-Himalayan Region: The Case of the Brahmaputra" hosted by North East's premier think tank Asian Confluence shed light on the possible devastating impact of the proposed 60,000 MW power plant dam at the Great Band in China.
The seminar sought to foster a collaborative dialogue between governmental agencies, civil society organizations, environmental practitioners, and academicians on the immense challenges posed by the proposed dam in Tibet, amidst the looming threat of climate change.
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Experts express concern over Great Bend Dam in China - The Tribune
Global experts have expressed deep concern over Chinas proposed Great Bend Dam by China on Yarlung Tsangpo, as Brahmaputra is known in Tibet, during a seminar held in Guwahati on Tuesday.www.tribuneindia.com
Is there a link?An X Indian handle hinting something fishy from Indian side ....
In the same conference in concluding remark it was stated that dam will have minimum impact due to heavy rainfall in Arunachal
Infact dam May be good news as Arunchal as 14 time more water it needs compared to population and Assam has 3x more
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